VA Bill Means a New $50 Billion Entitlement
VA Bill Means a New $50 Billion Entitlement · The Fiscal Times

Congress is rushing to pass Veterans Affairs Department spending legislation to respond to the patient scheduling scandal that may have cost the lives of dozens of veterans who were intentionally kept off an official electronic appointment list and didn’t receive the prompt treatment they required.

Last week, the House and Senate swiftly and overwhelmingly approved bills to greatly expand veterans’ medical coverage, including allowing veterans living more than 40 miles from a VA facility and having trouble scheduling an appointment to turn to private doctors and health care facilities that accept Medicare patients.

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The legislation would also grant the VA authority to spend $500 million of its budget to hire more doctors and nurses to expand services, as well as strengthening the VA’s hand in firing or demoting incompetent administrators.

While there is near political unanimity on the need for the legislation, some experts warn the long-term budget implications are getting short shrift.

Unless lawmakers are more careful in hammering out the final version of the legislation, they say, Congress may be en route to creating a new open-ended entitlement costing an additional $50 billion a year, based on a preliminary and partial Congressional Budget Office estimate.

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That would come on top of the $44 billion the VA currently spends each year for veteran health care services. In effect, the legislation would eventually double the government’s annual spending for those services.

For now, Congress is treating the alternative private care provision as short term, designed to be phased out by 2016 when the planned expansion of VA medical staff is completed. However, Congress will likely come under pressure from veterans groups and others to make the private care alternative permanent – with serious budgetary implications.

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a government-spending watchdog, says that if the program were permanently extended, fully phased in and adjusted for inflation, the overall cost would exceed $500 billion in the next decade.

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“The provision could create an entitlement bigger than Medicare Part D when it was enacted,” the group said in a new analysis. “For the cost of making this new entitlement permanent, policy makers could fully repeal the defense sequester.”

Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), the chief authors of the legislation, said last week that the government has a moral obligation to do all it can for those who have served the country.